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Customer Relationship Management

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Contents

Foreword

ix

About the authors

xi

Acknowledgements

xv

Chapter 1

CRM top of the management agenda

1

Long-term forces Massive investment with questionable return Barriers to success Conclusions References

4 9 10 15 15

Chapter 2

17

A strategic framework for CRM

Process 1: Strategy development Process 2: Value creation Process 3: Channel and media integration Process 4: Information management Process 5: Performance assessment References

21 24 26 30 34 41

Chapter 3

The strategy development process

42

Development of business strategy From business strategy to competitive strategy Implementation and the importance of customer strategies Case study 3.1: A fruitful passion for Orange

42 43 44 46

vi

Contents

Case study 3.2: Britannia Building Society: Turning information into insight Case study 3.3: Time to remodel at Homebase.co.uk Chapter 4

The value creation process

69 86 101

Building the value proposition for target customers Case study 4.1: Friends First: Building the customer centric organization Case study 4.2: Canada Life (Ireland): Committed to excellence in customer care Case study 4.3: Connecting the dots: Sun Microsystems References

102

Chapter 5

143

Channel and media integration process

105 118 127 142

Case study 5.1: Wesleyan Assurance Society Case study 5.2: RS Components: Proactive purchase power Case study 5.3: asserta home

146 153 164

Chapter 6

184

Information management process

Case study 6.1: The Derbyshire Building Society: Putting the customer at the heart of business Case study 6.2: Canada Life (UK): Leveraging value from legacy systems Case study 6.3: Reaal Particulier: Improving customer focus through field sales integration Case study 6.4: NatWest: Bold new statements

214 221

Chapter 7

237

Performance assessment process

190 202

Case study 7.1: Sears, Roebuck and Company Case study 7.2: Nortel Networks Case study 7.3: Siemens CT Division References

240 246 252 256

Chapter 8

257

CRM investments and shareholder value

Summary of cases Valuing CRM investments

257 262

Contents

S S S S S S

vii

Does CRM create shareholder value? Summary References

268 272 273

Chapter 9

274

The future of CRM: What opinion leaders think

Don Peppers Dave Fagan Simon Kelly Phill Robinson

276 280 284 287

Index

291

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Foreword

C

RM has confounded the business world since its inception. Indeed, analysts Gartner calculate that 65 per cent of CRM projects failed last year (2001). Yet industry remains committed to CRM: despite an inhospitable IT investment climate, spending projections for the sector remain in the ascendancy. The reason for the perseverance is obvious: a coterie of businesses is getting CRM right and achieving impressive results. Perhaps more fundamentally, businesses appreciate the inherent logic that underpins CRM practice, and the sense in adhering to its guidelines however maddening this can prove to be at times. As a CRM technology vendor, my business grapples every day with the realities of what best-practice CRM entails. Quite simply, it is about understanding customers and helping them to satisfy their individual needs. Of course, behind that it is about helping businesses to increase their own value. With a deft touch, this book unravels the curious mix of social, technological and business changes that have spawned the CRM industry. The scale of the research is breathtaking; it offers insight from the industry’s leading thinkers, and is peppered with case study examples from a range of industries. In Customer Relationship Management: Perspectives from the Marketplace, one is left with a real sense of the potential of CRM to deliver business value, provided certain ingredients are in place. Getting senior management to buy into CRM at an early stage is perhaps the most critical of these ingredients. To that end, I could not recommend a wiser starting point than this enthralling book. I hope you enjoy and are as provoked as much as I was from it. Michael Kelly Founder and CEO FINEOS Corporation

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About the authors

SIMON KNOX BSc PhD Professor of Brand Marketing Simon Knox is Professor of Brand Marketing at the Cranfield School of Management in the UK and is a consultant to a number of multinational companies including McDonald’s, Levi Strauss, DiverseyLever, BT and Exel. Upon graduating, he followed a career in the marketing of international brands with Unilever plc in a number of senior marketing roles in both detergents and foods. Since joining Cranfield, Simon has published over 100 papers and books on strategic marketing and branding and is a regular speaker at international conferences. He is a Director of the Cranfield Centre for Advanced Research in Marketing in the School and is currently leading a research team looking at the impact of Corporate Social Responsibility on Brand Management. He is the co-author of two recent books, Competing on Value, published by FT Pitman Publishing in the UK, Germany, the USA and China, and Creating a Company for Customers, published by FT Prentice-Hall, in the UK, Brazil and India. STAN MAKLAN BA MBA Visiting Fellow and PhD Candidate Stan Maklan is an experienced marketer and management consultant with senior, international line management experience in blue chip consumer and business marketing companies. Stan spent the first 10 years of his career in marketing with Unilever Canada, UK and Sweden, where he was Marketing Director of its Toiletries business. He

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About the authors

spent the following 10 years largely in consulting, most recently with Sapient, a leading builder of new economy businesses as a senior manager specializing in CRM and marketing strategy. Previously, Stan was a managing consultant with one of the world’s largest IT-management consulting firms, CSC Computer Sciences. Stan established CSC UK’s Customer Relationship Management practice and then moved to a role within its European Consulting and global management research unit (Research Services). Prior to that, Stan had his own consulting firm specializing in business to business marketing; clients included Motorola, Dell, Santa Cruz Operation, Hong Kong Telecom, Molyncke, Southern Water, Atomic Energy Authority Technology and British Olympic Association. Stan was awarded honours for academic excellence when he obtained a Masters of Business Administration from the University of Western Ontario (Canada) and has a Bachelor of Science (Economics) from the Universite´ de Montre´al. He is a French and Swedish speaker, and a regular contributor to marketing seminars, courses and publications. ADRIAN PAYNE MEd MSc PhD FRMIT Professor of Services and Relationship Marketing Adrian Payne is Professor of Services and Relationship Marketing and Director of the Centre for Customer Relationship Management at the Cranfield School of Management, Cranfield University. He has practical experience in marketing, market research, corporate planning and general management. His previous appointments include positions as chief executive for a manufacturing company and he has also held senior appointments in corporate planning and marketing. He is an authority on Relationship Marketing and Customer Relationship Management and is an author of six books on these topics. His research interests are in Customer Retention Economics; the impact of IT on CRM; and Marketing Strategy and Planning in Service Businesses. Adrian is a frequent keynote speaker at public and in-company seminars and conferences around the world. He also acts as a consultant and educator to many service organizations, professional service firms and manufacturing companies. JOE PEPPARD BBS MSc PhD FICS Senior Research Fellow in Information Systems Joe Peppard is a Senior Research Fellow at the Information Systems Research Centre (ISRC). A Graduate of Trinity College Dublin he previously spent five years lecturing at his alma mater, joining Cranfield in 1992. He has held visiting positions at Groningen University in Holland and the University of South Australia and is currently external examiner at a number of institutions. Joe is

About the authors

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S S S S S S

a Director of Fineos Corporation and Sophos Development, and a member of the Editorial Board of the European Management Journal. Joe has been involved with the ISRC since its establishment and has worked on many of the centre’s research projects. He is a Fellow of the Irish Computer Society, a charter member of the Association for Information Systems and a member of the UK Academy of Information Systems, British Academy of Management, and the Academy of Management. His publications include IT Strategy for Business (Pitman Publishing), The Essence of Business Process Reengineering (Prentice-Hall International), Business Process Re-engineering: Current Perspectives and Research Directions (Kogan Page), and Strategic Planning for Information Systems (Wiley), as well as articles in both academic and general business journals. He is retained by a number of companies as an adviser on IS/IT, e-commerce and strategy related matters. LYNETTE RYALS MA (OXON) MBA FSIP Marketing Lecturer Lynette Ryals began her career in the City as a fund manager and stockbroker trading UK equities, options and futures, and still lectures occasionally on finance issues. She then moved to a marketing company to work on corporate development and acquisitions, subsequently transferring into the consultancy arm of the same business group. Lynette is a Registered Representative of the London Stock Exchange and is the only woman in the UK to have passed the Fellowship examinations of the Society of Investment Professionals. She is co-author of Customer Relationship Management: The Business Case, a management report in the FT Prentice-Hall series, with Simon Knox and Stan Maklan. Lynette has also been Director of the Executive MBA programme at Cranfield.

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Acknowledgements

T

he authors would like to thank Margrit Bass, a freelance journalist, for her major contribution to the book – by ensuring that six of the cases were delivered on time and with the appropriate management emphasis. In many ways, writing the cases proved to be only part of the challenge; gaining access to the companies and their managers, agreeing with them what could and should be disclosed and, finally, getting agreement to publish what had been written about the company and its CRM practices all proved to be both time-consuming and requiring considerable diplomatic skills! Margrit proved more than up to the job in developing the case studies for Orange, Homebase, SunMicrosystems, RS Components, asserta home and NatWest. Jane Simms, a freelance writer and editor specializing in marketing and business management, carried the burden of editing the entire book by joining together chapters in a masterly way and contributing parts of the text. We would like to thank Jane for her patience and professionalism. We wish to thank Sapient Ltd for its financial contribution and help with the Homebase and asserta home cases, both of whom were Sapient clients. Finally, our thanks to Gill Glass for her secretarial support in maintaining, updating and formatting the files we created as the book was written, starting with Adrian Payne’s strategic framework for CRM, through case study writing to the final chapter on CRM futures. Without Gill’s meticulous attention to detail and responsiveness to last minute changes, we could not have delivered the manuscript in such a highly finished format.

xvi

Acknowledgements

With the exception of the case study on Siemens, the cases are the Copyright of the Cranfield School of Management and are published with their permission. Professor Simon Knox Stan Maklan Professor Adrian Payne Dr Joe Peppard Lynette Ryals Note Please note that the term ‘billion’ is used throughout this book meaning a thousand million (1000,000,000).

Chapter

1

CRM top of the management agenda

I

n an era of increasingly transient management themes, few board agenda items are attracting the sustained attention of Customer Relationship Management, or CRM. To provide some measure of the explosion of management interest in CRM, UK market research company Forrester Research searched the Dow Jones’ content base of more than 6000 management publications for references about CRM and found 6048 articles in 2000, up from 442 articles in 1998 (Chatham et al. 2001). This sudden proliferation of references can be partly explained by the lack of a widely accepted definition for CRM: consequently managers and writers use the term broadly to describe all forms of transactions between customers and their suppliers. In this book, we look at CRM as an organization-wide process, which focuses its activities on treating different customers differently to increase value for both customer and organization. In an article on its web site, the European Centre for Customer Strategies quotes Hewson Consulting’s definition of CRM as ‘a business strategy focusing on winning, growing and keeping the right customers’ (European Centre for Customer Strategies 2001). A recent CRM report published by the Financial Times (Ryals et al. 2000) suggests that CRM consists of three main elements: 1. identifying, satisfying, retaining and maximizing the value of the firm’s best customers;

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Customer Relationship Management

2. wrapping the firm around the customer to ensure that each contact with the customer is appropriate and based upon extensive knowledge both of the customer’s needs and profitability; 3. creating a complete picture of the customer. The Financial Times report identifies the major components for the successful implementation of CRM as: &

&

&

&

&

a front office that integrates sales, marketing and service functions across media (call centres, people, stores, internet); a data warehouse to store customer information and the appropriate analytic tools with which to analyse the data and learn about customer behaviour; business rules developed from the data analysis to ensure the front office benefits from the firm’s learning about its customers; measures of performance that enable customer relationships to continually improve; integration into the firm’s operational and support (or ‘back office’) systems, ensuring that the front office’s promises are delivered.

Developing a consistent approach to managing customer relationships has been a core objective for the Royal Bank of Canada in implementing its CRM strategy:

EXAMPLE The Royal Bank of Canada began collecting customer data in 1978 and by the early 1990s had implemented client segmentation in its data warehouse, dividing its customers into three distinct profitability segments. While this provided front-line staff with segmentation codes, these were often interpreted subjectively, resulting in an inconsistent approach at corporate level. Following research, the bank set about implementing a CRM strategy which allowed it to offer customers an integrated service across its entire product range. To achieve this it needed to measure client offerings, cost management, pricing initiatives and marketing spend. The bank uses five criteria to analyse customer information: income, expense and risk (net interest revenue); other revenue (fees, commission); direct expense (variable cost); indirect expense (overheads); and risk provision. The bank also recognized that profitability was affected by the type and frequency of customer events, their balances and the channels they use.

CRM top of the management agenda

3

S S S S S S

The Royal Bank of Canada’s nine million customers are segmented, however, it has developed strategies not only for these segments but also for hundreds of micro-segments, as it moves towards its objective of oneto-one marketing. It plans to develop individual treatment strategies on small cells of customers to establish what works and what doesn’t, and to test refinements on an ongoing basis. The customer data are also allowing it to move from assessing current customer value to potential value, by taking into account factors such as lifestyle changes. The bank has also recognized that ‘there is no such thing as an unprofitable customer’ and is tailoring its product offerings to suit what are normally considered to be unprofitable customers. One of the immediate gains was discovering from recalculating customer profitability that its previous measurement metrics had been inaccurate for as many as 75 per cent of its customers.

CRM is not only being written about; big businesses are actively investing in CRM initiatives and technologies. A Forrester report (Callinan et al. 2001) quotes from its first quarter 2001 North America Benchmark study that 82 per cent of firms in the study have CRM implementations planned or in progress. This result is consistent with other published surveys and suggests that most big businesses are actively implementing some facets of one-to-one or relationship marketing. Popular three-letter acronyms come and go, but we believe that the core of CRM will continue as an enduring foundation of most businesses. Creating satisfied customers at a profit has been espoused as the prime role of business since Peter Drucker first wrote about it almost 50 years ago (Drucker 1954: ‘it is the customer who determines what a business is . . . the purpose of a firm is to create and keep customers’). However, operationally, the traditional focus of business is improving efficiencies. This focus on efficiency has its roots deep in economic thought. Adam Smith did not write about customer satisfaction, retention and relationships; he developed theories of specialization, division of labour and production efficiencies. Economic theory that originates from his model of perfect markets assumes that competition for undifferentiated products drives prices down to a level necessary merely to sustain investment in continued production. In this model, there are no brands, product differentiation, loyal customers or excess profits. In Adam Smith’s world, merely being an efficient producer of commodities, accepting the price and volume dictated by the market satisfies the firm. Our professional and personal experience suggests that firms in a competitive market are anything but passive price and volume takers. Firms innovate in

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Customer Relationship Management

product design, product function, manufacturing processes, distribution, service and communications to differentiate their offers from those of competitors. Much of this innovation focuses upon creating new and improved products (and services) and reducing costs. Efficiency, coupled with product innovation, drives competitive strategy for most firms. Long-term social, business and economic trends are having an impact on this efficiency drive and organizations no longer focus exclusively upon making better products at lower cost. We observe that many firms strive to help customers in both consumer and business markets become more effective through the goods and services they sell them. For example, improving effectiveness for consumers of financial services may not just be about creating an innovative investment product, it is more likely to centre around helping consumers achieve important life goals such as financial security and increased leisure time. Many financial services providers have segmented their customer base by life stage in order to talk to consumers about these life goals in addition to the products they offer. A business-to-business equivalent example is found in information technology. Effective use of IT is not delivered through faster computers and new software applications alone; it is more likely to be delivered by helping firms improve their businesses by measures such as moving fixed costs to variable costs, quickly growing the business to scale and developing global reach. Efficiency-driven firms focus on the products and services they sell, whereas effective firms focus on their ability to understand and fulfil individual customers’ most important needs. Efficiency-driven firms seek competitive advantage in scale, experience and creating barriers to entry. Effective firms seek competitive advantage in customer involvement, service and superior knowledge of customer motivations and behaviour. Their customers, rather than their technology and production, drive effective businesses. Moving from efficiency to effectiveness represents a big shift in business emphasis, and is one of the drivers behind the surge of attention and investment in CRM.

Long-term forces Much has been written about the emerging social and economic environment that is enabling this shift in business focus. For the purposes of introducing CRM and current best practice in the area, we wish to concentrate on the three factors we believe are most responsible for creating customer-driven businesses. These are:

CRM top of the management agenda

5

S S S Evolution of relationship marketing S S S

1. the evolution of the relationship marketing concept; 2. the impact of information technology; 3. changing customer behaviour and motivation.

Since the early 1990s, academics and consultants have promoted the idea that marketing practice should focus upon identifying and serving the organization’s best customers and prospective customers. This may sound highly intuitive, but ten years ago it represented a radical departure from the tradition of marketers identifying and dominating the most attractive product markets. Traditional marketing focuses on resegmenting markets to create and dominate defensible product positions. Product portfolio tools, such as the Boston Consulting Group Matrix, helped firms balance investments across product ranges to maximize profit and long-term growth. Firms allocated scarce resources against competing product investments to ensure that there was a balance of cash generated and attractive investments. In most industries, each product investment was considered on its own merits in accordance with financial analysis tools that tie investment decisions to shareholder value. Firms were free to pick and choose in which market segments they wished to compete on the basis of market and financial attractiveness. Proponents of relationship marketing challenged the customer and economic logic behind product portfolio management. They argue that: 1. Differences in customer profitability are at least as important as differences in product/market profitability to shareholder value. 2. Customer value is created by customers effectively using goods and services as individuals, as much as by the intrinsic qualities of the goods and services themselves. In other words, they support the effectiveness versus efficiency argument. Reicheld’s work at Bain Consulting led him to publish findings from research and practice suggesting that differences in the performance of insurance brokers were better explained by examining customer loyalty and retention than by market share, unit cost and scale (Reichheld 1996). He argued that customers become increasingly profitable over time because: 1. customer acquisition costs spread over a larger turnover; 2. customer spending tends to accelerate over time; 3. operating costs fall as customers know the firm’s products, services and policies better; 4. satisfied customers make referrals; and

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Customer Relationship Management

5. loyal customers are less price sensitive, allowing the firm to maintain if not improve its margin. Garth Hallberg reminds us in the title of his book that All Consumers are Not Created Equal (Hallberg 1995). He presents research, which shows that, in most industries, a minority of customers (10–15 per cent) generate the majority of profits. So not only does customers’ profitability increase over time, but some customers are potentially far more profitable than others. Peppers and Rogers popularized the expression ‘one to one’, by suggesting that when considering the differences between customers’ profitability and needs, companies must ‘differentiate customers, not just products’ (Peppers and Rogers 1994). Attracting and retaining the right customer will have a dramatic impact on the business. Aside from the commercial logic of becoming customer centric, organizations that move beyond short-term, transactional customer relationships can address customers’ deeper and broader needs. If customers teach a firm about their motivations and behaviours and the firm responds to this knowledge, the firm can make the customer more effective at the task at hand whilst differentiating and extending its own offer. Over time, this positive cycle of learning and doing ‘locks in’ loyalty and allows the firm to capture more of the economic value in its value chain. Good products are no longer sufficient to compete. Today, firms must create customized solutions to customers’ more profound problems. Reprising the effectiveness argument, companies today must create effective solutions to individual customers’ problems, not simply improve their efficiency.

Impact of information technology The theory of relationship marketing is intuitively appealing, but its widespread implementation has been facilitated by new information technology that permits organizations to identify and manage large numbers of individual customers. New technologies have enabled firms to implement CRM by: & & &

providing greater individual customer insight; allowing firms to effectively respond to individual requirements; and integrating the business processes of the firm around individual customers.

It gets cheaper and cheaper for firms to store large quantities of customer information in a format that they can access for customer service and analysis. The cost of data storing and processing continues to fall, while advances in data warehousing and mining software improve a firm’s ability to learn from customer data. Firms are creating integrated ‘virtual front offices’ where all customerfacing staff can access these data so that individual customers are treated in a manner consistent with their individual needs and the firm’s customer objectives.

CRM top of the management agenda

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S S S S S S

Thomas Cook, the travel agent, was quick to recognize the importance of this facility for customers who had their traveller’s cheques stolen abroad.

EXAMPLE When dealing with a frantic customer calling collect from Azerbaijan to report his passport and travellers cheques stolen, the last thing any travel company worth its salt would want to do would be to put him on hold while the service agent fumbles around trying to extract his details from various databases. The ability to react swiftly in any such situation was at the forefront of Thomas Cook’s thinking when it prepared to launch its Global Services Division in 1998. Designed to be a virtual worldwide call centre for the traveller, Global Services’ core business is the provision of a complete travel assistance service covering everything from emergency, legal and medical services to hotel bookings and ticket replacement. Given the scope of its vision, Thomas Cook realized that it would need a system which would enable it to handle a high volume of customer contact, not only 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, but in 28 different languages. From a user perspective, the key advantage of the Global Services which Thomas Cook implemented is that the system controls the call. As soon as the call is picked up, a service agent can identify the customer, and pinpoint where he is and what language he speaks. A map appears on the screen showing where the caller is so they can be directed to the nearest service point. The level of data held on the system includes all previous data on and any correspondence with each customer, enabling Thomas Cook to build an increasingly complex profile of each individual and to offer a more personalized service. For example, if a customer had previously booked a certain hotel in a city and was revisiting it, the service agent could offer to book that same hotel using the customer’s preferred credit card.

This enhanced customer insight is only valuable where firms can effectively respond to what they have learnt. A history of mass production and marketing has created structures, cultures and business systems that are not designed to configure products and services according to individual customers’ needs. However, modern planning, logistics and manufacturing software and processes enable companies to customize goods and services cost effectively across large numbers of customers. This is often called ‘mass-customization’. Because of their

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Customer Relationship Management

cost and complexity, these systems were once the exclusive domain of large companies. But solution providers are now developing lower cost versions for small- and medium-sized businesses, and on a variable, rather than fixed, cost basis. These solutions integrate firms with their suppliers, further increasing the firm’s ability to deliver against its promise to individual customers. This integration extends from the individual firm through to its core suppliers, offering whole industries a greater ability to meet individual customer needs. These integrated value chains allow customers to collaborate with advisers, specify products, services or solutions and permit rapid, cost-effective fulfilment through complex alliances of suppliers and logistics firms. Information-rich value chains will be sensitive to individual customer changes and provide real-time information on the progress of individual orders, aggregate demand, forward demand, costs and billing information. The impact of these technologies is to permit businesses, and their suppliers, to ‘build to order’ cost effectively once the customer and the firm have agreed what is needed.

Changing customer behaviour and motivation We have reviewed, albeit briefly, how firms increasingly understand the economics of relationship marketing and how technology permits its implementation. The final long-term factor promoting the development of customer-centric businesses is changing customer behaviour and motivation. Today’s customers have growing expectations of suppliers, in terms of depth of advice, product and service quality, price transparency, warranty and postsales service. We believe that consumers and business customers alike expect a ‘joined-up-service’ where firms’ marketing, sales and service delivers against their expectations and the firm’s promise. ‘It is not my department’ is a less and less acceptable means of handling customer inquiries. As businesses integrate around individual customers, these expectations will grow stronger. There are many instances of customers wishing to influence a firm’s internal management processes. Customers are being conditioned to expect that they are ‘in charge’ of the customer–supplier relationship through advertising, media and management reports. This leads to the firm’s internal processes being held up to public scrutiny. Conditions of workers in factories making shoes and jeans for famous brands have been publicly discussed, as have many individual firm’s environmental policies. We believe that this expectation of customer sovereignty is creating a new set of customer behaviours and motivations around dealing with companies which, they feel, share the same values across issues that matter to them. More demanding customers are also becoming more competent purchasers. Customers demand a say in what they are being offered and expect to be dealing

CRM top of the management agenda

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with firms that listen and respond. In business marketing, this trend has been evident for many years. Important customers make an early input to suppliers’ product development processes because the costs of misjudging customer needs are too high for both customers and suppliers. Even consumers are beginning to insist on knowing more about the products they consume and are contributing to the product development process. Online marketing and communication may help facilitate this development and ‘train’ consumers to interact directly with the manufacturers of goods and services they consume. We predict that consumers will be increasingly unwilling to accept being the ‘object’ of companies’ marketing processes, and that companies will need to get better at listening, learning and responding to individuals – the basic tenets of CRM as we have defined it.

Massive investment with questionable return We have identified the long-term trends among companies, their customers and in technology that are acting as a catalyst for the customer-centric view of business. Business leaders have been sensitive to these trends and are making substantial investments in changing their organizations to allow them to flourish in the new environment. Forrester Research (Chatham et al. 2001) has produced detailed estimates, based upon companies’ experiences and a definition of CRM consistent with the one used in this book, of the investments large firms will need to make when implementing CRM programmes. Using American accounting conventions, Forrester suggests that large firms (i.e. Global 3500 firms) should expect to spend between $60 million (retailers) and $130 million (banks) over three years on the requisite CRM applications, data maintenance and operations. Manufacturing companies will come in at around $75 million. It is the size of investment companies need to make to move from a product to a customer focus that is fuelling the growth of the CRM IT services market. The European Centre for Customer Strategies (2001) quotes an estimate from Accenture that the global CRM market (software, hardware, training and services) will top $700 billion by 2006. The ECCS also estimates that the European CRM market will top $34 billion by 2004. At the time of writing this book, it would appear that the downturn in technology spending early in 2001 has not significantly affected CRM. The more customers access services through proliferating media and devices, the more firms seem willing to invest in technologies that will help them integrate this stream of contacts around individual customers, analyse the data and

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Customer Relationship Management

communicate back to customers through an increasingly complex web of interrelated media and channels. However, despite the level of investment in technology, processes and people to improve customer relationships, there is growing concern that many, if not most, firms fail to realize or measure a sufficient return on these investments. Given the level of investment and sensitivity of the programmes, it is hard to find a definitive and authoritative view on the actual return which CRM programmes are delivering. Clearly, if financial returns were proving hard to measure and achieve, that would make unwelcome news for a massive industry. Nevertheless, from our regular reviews of consulting reports and web sites, the authors find a pattern emerging whereby less than one third of CRM programmes deliver the intended return. Below are some examples of the data from which we draw this conclusion: &

&

&

&

Internetweek online reports research results from the renowned CRM consulting firm AMR that only 12 per cent of companies that have implemented CRM software say it has exceeded their expectations (Kemp 2001). Insight Technology Group (ITG) reported on the web from a survey of 1000 sales force reengineering projects that only 21 per cent met or exceeded expectations. Of the 38 per cent that met none or only some expectations, two thirds plan major rewrites to the systems and one third will shelve their current systems. The OTR group surveyed 1500 companies in six European Union countries and found that only 27 per cent of those which had implemented a data warehouse were able to identify a quantifiable financial benefit. KPMG research from 1997 entitled ‘The Hidden Advantage’ revealed that only 16 per cent of UK companies measure the ROI of data warehouse investment, 30 per cent do not use it regularly once it is built and 87 per cent fail to attribute value to the information generated.

Barriers to success We should not be surprised that firms embracing new management thinking through large-scale change programmes find that immediate returns fall below expectations. Many of the benefits of change programmes take longer to realize than was initially predicted and entail more fundamental organizational and cultural change than was planned. In this sense, CRM is similar to other change programmes that have preceded it. This section looks at barriers to success across each of the three letters in the CRM acronym – customer, relationship and management:

CRM top of the management agenda

11

S S S S Lack ofS customer strategy S & &

&

lack of a sufficiently robust customer strategy; relationships that are managed in the interests of the firm and not the customer; management that lacks sufficient ambition and information for the programme to succeed.

At the heart of any CRM programme must lie a profound understanding of how customers differ and the creation of a unique and relevant value proposition to address and exploit these differences. However, unfortunately, many organizations fail to get these two basic building blocks right. Firms seem to spend more time trying to understand customers’ different profitability (or potential profitability) than their needs and purchasing styles. We believe that many CRM customer propositions, such as creating a one-stop shop, providing a total solution, offering end-to-end service, and disintermediation, reflect a firm’s desire to sell more rather than a customer’s desire to buy more. The business case for CRM often begins with the assumptions about cross-selling and up-selling, that the business needs to justify an investment, rather than from a profound understanding of customers. In some industries, this homogenizes the CRM strategies of major competitors. Customer strategies move in the same direction, with firms making similar claims to the others and using similar technologies to implement their strategic choices. This is unlikely to lead to the kind of differentiated proposition necessary to generate a strong return on investment. Naive market research may point to customers’ desire to buy the ‘total end-to-end solution from a one-stop shop’, but a more sophisticated analysis of actual behaviour and purchasing styles may suggest otherwise. CRM-based value propositions require firms to have exceptional insight into how their customers use their goods and services, derived from customer behaviour models as well as data. But firms seem to have more data about their customers than insight. The KPMG report into the UK experience of data warehousing, mentioned above, suggests that IT and Marketing do not fully leverage each other’s skills to extract value from the investment, and that Marketing lacks some of the technical and modelling skills needed to generate valuable customer insight from data warehouses.

Relationships, but in whose interest? At the heart of the problem with CRM implementation lies the view that customer relationships can be managed, and managed by one partner in the relationship.

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Purveyors of new technology encourage managers to think that they can predict and manipulate customer behaviour for their own benefit. For example, data mining allows firms to analyse a limited set of customer behaviours and create procedures and rules among customer-facing staff in their new integrated front offices that encourage ‘desirable’ behaviour. Where these procedures and rules are blatantly in the interests of the firm rather than the consumer, they risk alienating both customers and the front line staff that serve them. Anecdotal evidence from industry suggests that consumers are increasingly reluctant to provide firms with the extensive information that they desire for their CRM systems. Consumers are ultimately rational and will understand both the value of their data and the likely benefit they will get from sharing it. Advances in data management, data mining, consumer profiling, content management systems and online personalization require highly sophisticated, rule-based systems that risk marginalizing both the customer and the firm’s customer-facing employees. For example, call centre employees are driven to reduce the average time spent with customers in an effort to increase productivity. It is obvious that this can frustrate both customers and the people employed to service them. Another example of ‘rules before customers’ can be found in a newspaper article about Marks & Spencer’s direct mail campaign to husbands of ‘husband and wife’ cardholders, suggesting lingerie as a gift and ‘helpfully’ providing the wives’ sizes. The article suggested that many cardholders felt this to be too intrusive and, in a number of instances, the sizes were wrong: women often buy underwear for other women. Intuitively, using customer data in this fashion does not sound like the basis of a trusting customer–retailer relationship. UK journalist Alan Mitchell likens the modern CRM marketer to a stalker who ‘gathers ever more information about his target and tries to get close entirely for his own purposes, regardless of the feelings and wishes of the person he is targeting’ (Mitchell 2001). For customers to enter into a relationship with firms, and provide them with invaluable, non-public, data about their needs and motivations, there must be some perceived value for the customer. Firms need a differentiated customer strategy, grounded in the different needs, behaviours and motivations of different customers, to persuade customers to part with this information. Firms need to understand the potential value they can create for customers, as well as for themselves, in order to create powerful relationships with customers.

Management lacks the required vision and ambition The success of large change programmes, such as moving from a product- to customer-focus, depends on management. Early published research on CRM

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effectiveness suggested that firms are not embracing a wide, customer-centric vision and pushing changes throughout the organization (Ryals and Payne 2001). Despite the tremendous financial investment in CRM programmes illustrated earlier in this chapter, Hewson Consulting found that only 18 per cent of firms surveyed met its criteria for implementing CRM (European Centre for Customer Strategies 2001). Recently, Bain Consulting reported that as many as one-fifth of CRM investments have actually destroyed customer relationships. You can, of course, challenge the definition of CRM, but the conclusions of much research generally do suggest that CRM change programmes often lack the scope and depth needed to succeed. A major study by Computer Sciences Corporation Index (1994) found a correlation between the level of ambition and the success of reengineering change programmes. CSC’s research found that reengineering programmes with ‘breakthrough’ ambitions were more likely to succeed than those with more modest objectives. It would appear that modest ambitions provide insufficient incentive to management to make the necessary changes in organization, processes, technology, training and reward systems that change requires. If CRM is managed as a separate campaign initiative, the firm is unlikely to become truly customer-centric – which explains Gartner’s conclusion that few companies have implemented ‘real’ CRM. The fact that so few companies set themselves high aims for CRM may be explained by the challenges of creating a business case: companies need to justify what is a major investment in CRM by identifying ‘hard’ business benefits in a short time frame. The intuitively obvious response is to promise specific achievements in cross-selling, up-selling and reduced service costs. However, ‘real’ CRM involves ongoing learning, where the customer receives incentives to teach firms what they want to know by the firm’s continual response to the information provided. Cross-selling and up-selling may be good outcomes of effective customer relationships, but they are perhaps not the right objectives: at the point of creating a business case, companies risk ‘objectifying’ the customer, so hindering the chances of a mutually beneficial relationship. The problem of insufficient ambition is compounded by the lack of any generally accepted measures of customer value. Value risks becoming an overused word in management circles: firms should create more customer value, but measuring it is problematic. Most of the published management literature focuses on measuring customer behaviour and the value of that behaviour to the firm. For example, the lifetime value of the customer, segment profitability, campaign profitability, consumer response rates and repurchase rates illustrate this. But the value of CRM programmes to the customer is merely assumed: people think that customers want a one-stop shop, a total solution and targeted offers, but there is scant evidence to either support or measure these assump-

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tions. Certainly, high-profile dot.com failures should cause marketers to reexamine their assumptions about the components of customer value. A CRM programme geared towards learning, as much as selling, should help firms measure better what customers value. However, as well as being ambitious and having the right measurement systems in place, to be successful CRM implementations need to work across all points of customer contact. Creating a consistent experience for each customer has long been a mantra for marketers. In the 1990s, consumer services marketers began focusing on customers’ ‘moments of truth’, managing what they communicate to the customer through each experience or touchpoint the customer has with the organization. The challenge of empowering every employee to be able to create a moment of truth for a customer at any given point of contact, has compounded with the explosion of new media. The moments of truth must now extend to the experiences created through call centres, internet sites (accessed via PCs and mobile phones), iTV and PDAs. Internet-based media also allow customers to direct their experiences, their ‘moments of truth’, and organizations must strike an appropriate balance between controlling the experience for the customer and the customer managing their experiences for themselves. The opportunity to integrate the business across media and across channels represents a major management challenge for most firms in terms of cost, complexity and change to their business practices. Many of the dot.com start-ups launched their businesses with such integration already in place. But few traditional businesses with substantial investment in existing media have developed a truly integrated approach to managing customers’ moments of truth. As we write, this level of integration is leading-edge management and technology practice. Ryals and Payne (2001) identified further management issues which inhibit successful implementation of CRM in financial services companies. They found that many financial services firms had skill shortages, particularly in technology, and inadequate funding which, inevitably, curtailed their ambitions. Financial services companies were not convinced of the value of investing to create an integrated view of the customer through data warehousing. Additionally, as they came to appreciate the scope of the change effort, firms realized that their initial budget provisions were inadequate. Business unit managers were not always willing to cooperate, a failing which compromises one of the fundamental tenets of CRM – the entire firm must integrate its efforts around customers’ needs. Finally, the authors found that many organizations lacked the measurement and reward systems needed to support the change from product- to customer-focus.

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Conclusions We have defined CRM as a far-reaching management process and demonstrated that most large businesses are making very significant investments to implement these relationship marketing practices. There are sustainable long-term customer, business and technical trends spurring these investments forward, and we predict that truly customer-centric organizations will continue to develop into the foreseeable future. However, early returns on investment are elusive for many firms, and more programmes are likely to fail to achieve their targeted returns than those which succeed. There is perhaps no one company that has ‘done it all’, whose model we can slavishly follow. The authors believe that there probably is no ‘one right way’ in CRM, as relationships are so different and heavily dependent on individual contexts. Each firm will need to find its own right way, depending on the customers it wishes to serve, its competencies and the environment in which it operates. In the next chapter, we identify five processes that we suggest managers focus on to maximize the potential of their CRM initiatives. These processes – strategy development, value creation, channel and media integration, information management and performance assessment – are explored individually in subsequent chapters through best practice case histories.

References Callinan, P., Weisman, D. and Girard, M. (2001) CRM finds repeat customers in the global 3500. In Business Technogaphics Brief, Forrester Research Inc. Chatham, R., Weisman, D., Orlov, V., Nakashimaru, V. and Howard, F. F. (2001) CRM: At What Cost? Cambridge, MA: Forrester Research Inc. Computer Science Corporation Index (1994) CSC Index: State of Reengineering Report. Boston, MA. Drucker, P. F. (1954) The Practice of Management. New York: Harper & Row. European Centre for Customer Strategies (2001) Waiting for the customer management revolution (www.eccs.uk.com/suppliers/newsanalysis/april2001_5.asp). Hallberg, G. (1995) All Consumers are Not Created Equal. John Wiley & Sons. Kemp, T. (2001) CRM stumbles amid usability shortcomings. Available at: http://www.internetweek.com/newslead01/lead040601.htm. Mitchell, A. (2001) Right Side Up. London: Harper-Collins. Peppers, D. and Rogers, M. (1994) The One-to-One Future. Piatkus, London. Reichheld, F. F. (1996) The Loyalty Effect. Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA.

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Ryals, L. and Payne, A. (2001) Customer management relationship in financial services: towards information-enabled relationship marketing. Journal of Strategic Marketing, 9, 3–27. Ryals, L., Knox, S. D. and Maklan, S. (2000) Customer Relationship Management: the business case for CRM. Financial Times, London: Prentice-Hall.

References 1 Chapter 1 CRM top of the management agenda Ryals, L., Knox, S. D. and Maklan, S. (2000) Customer Relationship Management: the business case for CRM. Financial Times, London: Prentice-Hall.

2 Chapter 2 A strategic framework for CRM This chapter is based on a paper by Payne, A. (2001) A Strategic Approach to CRM, copyright Professor Adrian Payne, and is used with his permission. Bower, M. and Garda R. A. (1985) The role of marketing in management. In Handbook of Modern Marketing (V. P. Buell, ed.). McGraw-Hill. Brown, S. A. (2000) Customer Relationship Management. Canada: John Wiley & Sons. Davenport, T. H., Harris, J. G. and Kohli, A. K. (2001) How do they know their customers so well? MIT Sloan Management Review, pp. 63–73. Economist (2000) E-management survey, November 18 2000. Hallowell, R. and Schlesinger, L. A. (2000) The service profit chain: intellectual roots, current realities and future prospects. In Handbook of Services Marketing and Management (D. Iacobucci and T. Swartz, eds). Thousand Oaks: Sage. Heskett, J. L., Sasser, W. E. Jr and Schlesinger, L. A. (1997) The Service Profit Chain. The Free Press. Kaplan, R. S. and Norton, D. P. (1996) The Balanced Scorecard. Harvard Business School Press. de Kare-Silver, M. (1998) E-shock. London: Macmillan Business. Payne, A. F. T. and Frow, P. (1999) Developing a segmented service strategy: improving measurement in relationship marketing. Journal of Marketing Management, 15, 797– 818. Peppard, J. (2000) Customer relationship management (CRM) in financial services. European Management Journal, 18, 312–327. Peppers, D. and Rogers, M. (1993) The One to One future: Building Business Relationships One Customer at a Time. Piatkus Books. Reichheld, F. F. and Sasser, W. E. Jr (1990) Zero defections: quality comes to services. Harvard Business Review, September–October 1990, pp 105–111.

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4 Chapter 4 The value creation process Payne, A. F. T. and Frow, P. (1999) Developing a segmented service strategy: improving measurement in relationship marketing. J. Market. Manag., 15, 797–818. Reichheld, F. F. and Sasser, W. E. Jr (1990) Zero defections: quality comes to services. Harvard Business Review, September–October, 105–111.

7 Chapter 7 Performance assessment process Laabs, J. (1999) The HR Side of Sears’ Comeback. Workforce, March, pp. 4–29. Nairn, G. (2001) A fast-moving bandwagon attracts new passengers. Financial Times IT review 13, July 4. Rucci, A. J., Kirn, S. P. and Quinn, R. T. (1998) The employee–customer–profit chain at Sears. Harvard Business Review, January–February, pp. 83–97. Sherman, S. (1997) Bringing Sears into the new world. Fortune, October, pp. 183–184. Siemens Annual Report (2000) Medical Solutions (Med). Siemens AG Medical Engineering – Products and Solutions. http://www.med.siemens.com/medroot/en/prod/index.html

8 Chapter 8 CRM investments and shareholder value Dorman, J. and Hasan, M. (1996) Turning lead into gold. Bank Marketing, 28(11), 28– 32. Financial Times (2001) Customers get no satisfaction. Financial Times, 23 May. Grant, A. W. H. and Schlisinger, L. A. (1995) Realize your customers’ full potential. Harvard Busness Review, 75(5), 59–72, September–October. Hallberg, G. (1995) All Customers Are Not Created Equal. Wiley, New York. Kutner, S. and Cripps J. (1997) Managing the customer portfolio of healthcare enterprises. The Healthcare Forum Journal, 40, 52–54. Luehrman, T. A. (1998) Investment opportunities as real options: getting started on the numbers. Harvard Business Review, 51–67. OTR Group (1997) Do the benefits of data warehousing justify the costs? Report published by OTR Group, London. Ryals, L. J. (2002) Are your customers worth more than money? Journal of Retailing and Service Studies (forthcoming). Ryals, L. J., Knox, S. D. and Maklan, S. (2000) Customer Relationship Management: The Business Case for CRM. Financial Times/Prentice-Hall: London, Management Research Report series. Saunders, J. (1999) Manufacturers build on CRM. Computing Canada, 25(32), 17–18. S S S S S S